r nn WMnriro bid jq p 1 n n v II SLJL J YOli. 3i The Weekly Enterprise. A DEMOCRATIC PAPER, rOR THE Businessman, the Farmer Ami the FAMILY CIRCLE. j la-ISUSHEB EVERY SATURDAY t T-rrrrnrnpr of Firm and Main streets Oregon City, Oregon. $ TERMS of SUBSCRIPTION: I gingle Copy one year, in advance, $2 00 TER MS of A D VER TISING : t Tr,n;ent advertisements, including all 'i-ral notices. V sri. of 12 line, 1 w.$ 2 50 1 00 For each subsequent insertion. One Cvhvnn, one year iuir ;; y-urter " Uu-iness Card, 1 Square one year. . .$120 00 . . 00 .. 40 .. 12 t ,v Ih mlUances to be made at the risk of Su'jtcribfrs, and at the expense of Agents. ROOK' AND JOB PRINTING, f 3" Hie Enterprise office is supplied with ; Vntiful. approved styles of type, and mod 1 ern MACHINE PKE&SRS. which will cual.Ie f t..e Proprietor tv do Job Piinting at all times I Neat, Quick and Cheap ! 53 Work solicited. -VI J'i.n' tra:) teti"ns upon a Specie busts, i ' ' JOHN MYERS, Financial Agent. JJ USIXESS OA RD S. R. F. BARCLAY, aVMO Jtti.-Wt-O -C3 Jui (Formerly burgeon to tlie Hon. H. 1J. Co.) OFFICE At Residence, Main street Ore pan City, Oiegon. T H. W ATKINS, M. D., SURG EON'. PoKTr.Axn, Okkg n. OFFICE 9.") Front street Residence cor ner f Main and Seventh streets. J. WELCH, DENTIST. , imminently Located at Oregon. City, Oregon ; ROOMS With Dr. Raffarrans, on Main st, 3 W. C. JOHNSON. V. O. M'l'OWN. Notirj' Public. I JOHNSON & BIcCQWN, 0 Oregon City, Oregon. , KT Will attend to all business entrusted to fiircaie in any of tlic Courts of the Statft, ( ullfct mouey, Negotiate loans, sell real estate rti . Particular attention given to contested tl nJ cae-i. ) A. C. CIUIM. c. w. paiuusii, Notary Public and Cm. of Jjccdt. GIBB3 & PAERISH, Attorneys and Counselors at Laid, , Portland, Okego.v. OFFICE On Alder street, in Carters t brick block. 'j. H. MlTCIIKtX. J. X. DOLPII. A. SMITH ' Mitchell, Dolpli & Smith, Attorneys and Counsellors at Law, Solicitors in Chancery, and Proc- c tors in Adwirallu- - J5T Office o-fir the old Post Office, Front is'reet, I'ortlaud, Oregon. Logan, Sliattuck & Killin, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, So. lOO Front Street, Up Stairs, I PORTLAXP, OR EC. ON. :pAGE & THAYER, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. OFFICE In Crce's Building, corner of S Front and Stark streets, Portland. SJ:tf i ' ' f. CAri.ES. J. C. MOKELAND. CAPLER ,t MORELAXD, " ATTORNEYS AT LAW, ' Cor. ritOXT and WASHINGTON Sis., PORTLAND, OREOO". J, AW PAKTNKUSIIIP. .IAS. K. KELLY, r.- i,lrnfp, Columbia st I lwt. 2d and 3d t. j. ii. ni:r.n, Ttesidence corner of Columbia and 7th sts. i Jas. K. Kelly and J. 11. Reed, under the l firm name of . KELLY A UKED, TV.!! practice law in the Courts of Oregon. i Ullice on First street, near Aiucr, over me rtw l'ost office room, Port and. , (40tf ;XinxTstout; : Attorney aiu Cotmselor at La-s, Q PORTLAND, OREGON. Office Under the .United States District Court Room. Frout street. 40tf .jM. McKEXNEY, ATTORNEY AT LAW, OREGON CITY, OTtEGOX.' OlIN II. SCIIRAM. Manufacturer and Dealer in SADDLES, HARNESS, etc.. etc.. Main Street, Oregon (ity, lWihes to renresent that he is now as f.l prepared to furnish any article in his line the largest establishment in the State. He farticularly requests that an examination of stock lie made before buying elsewhere. ! F. S. 0 S T H E I IfT . 4 J IMPOIlTEn AND DEALER IX egars, Tobacco. Pipes, Stationery I CUTLERY, YANKEE NOTIONS, ic. 1 o I t3- Xo. S3, corner of Front and Washing ton streets, fire proof brick store, called the ).d Corner, opposite American Exchange Portlaud, Oregon 37.3m E. A. r-AUKER. i. II. BELL. BELL &, PARKER. DRUGGISTS, Vhemicals, Patent Jfedicines, Paints, I Perfumery, Oils, Varnishes, Jnd erery article kept in a Drag Store. Main f -reet, Oiegou City. AXD DEALERS IX THE SOJVU OF THE SHELL, BY JULIA A. EAST il AX. Is it lonely, 1 wonder, the beautiful shell. That it murmurs forever the song of the sea? With its musical moan is it trying to t,dl Ths tale of the ocean to you and to me? The care of pink ccral the grotto of pearl The mermen and mermaids who spot t down below Sea weeds ard sea mosses that daintily curl Bright flowers that never inland gardens grow! Is it lonely, I wonder, that all the day long Whenever I listen 'tis singing to me The dim, and the distant, the sorrowful song That it learned, long ago, of its mother the sea? That gray ocean mother who nrver is still, But sings to her childien forever and aye And always is rocking and rocking them still, By sunlght and starlight, by night and by day. So loud iu the tempest, so long in the calm Do they listen far down in their cradles of sand? In the haunts of the iceberg, the wilds of the palm, In frozen Spitsbergen, or vine-covered land? The sail in the offing the boat on the bay The stars in the sky and the stars in the wave The dusky browed children with pebbles at play The salior's silent, and tnnoticed grave The sYp that w. nt saibng, and sailing afar, The eyes that were watching, and waiting so long, The wild waste of waters, the one floating spar. All these area part of the wonderful song. Sweet shell of the ocean! Life's discord and whirl Can never destroy the sweet music of home ! Like thee, in thy pink, polished chamber of pearl, Let us sing the old melodies where'er we roam ! Tlic Oregon tHllnl4 Farewell to liis Indian untl tlicii-Annual " Green, bai." From the Orogonian Sept. 7th. The following is n synopsis of late Agent Barnlmrt's u Farewell Address" to the Indians of Uma tilla lieservation, with whom he had lived as Agent for the ast eight years. The scene is said ly eye-witnesses to have been affect ing beyond description, The young, the old, the lame, the halt, the blind, all, all came to perform n painful duty to bid their old Agent, friend and companion a sad farewell : My Dkaii Fkikxds : The time has at List come when Ave must j part. The dark hour is upon us. i The calamity may be no longer averted. Your grief and despair are alike as unavailing as my own anguish and regret. " the Kubicon is passed !" " The Oordion knot has been cut !" "The Jhxnd has ceased plminff" In short "My Goose is Boyled.' For eight years we have lived happily and peacefully together. The flower of my manhood has passed away in your service. When I came among you first my brow was unwrinkled and my hair was as tlic raven's wing. Now I am in the sere and yellow leaf my step is infirm, and my head is white yet I trust that my memo ry will ever remain green with pleasant recollections of my sojoufn with you. When we review the past, eight years seems a short time ; yet in that period what changes we have witnessed imme diately around us ! Many, very many of our dear old friends wise counselors in your tribe have passed away to a better world. Another generation is springing up about you to reap the benefits of that new and higher civilization which the Great Father lias promised, and which has been so assiduously planted and cultiva ted by me. As I said, Ave have lived happily toether, and, doubtless, Avould continue to so liA'e for many years to come, Averc it not ordered other wise by the Great Father at Wash ingtoiu Figuratively speaking, you arc his children ; and Avere I a cousin, in a literal sense, or even more remotely connected by the ties of consanguinity, 1 would most probably be permitted to remain with you as you desire. Ihit un fortunately 1 am not related to the President, and that, of course, lets me out. One of the theories of our so' ereign Pepublican form of Govern ment is that when any of its citi zens become competent, by zeal and experience, to assist in its ad ministration in a manner to reflect credit on the nation, they should tLieut. Boyle is Barnhart's successor as agert on the reservation. ITY9 OBEGOIV, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 189 ISOSi at once be displaced, however ex alted or subordinate the position they ma)- have occupied; that oth ers, totally unqualified for the re quired duties, may have the op portunity to acquire that knowl edge of public affairs deemed so essential and necessary for a self governed people to possess. The practical application of this theory is one of the beauties of our sover eignty, and is in perfect accord AA'ith the genius of our free institutions. Political economists and other Utopians have sometimes objected to this principle in our govcrniiient as being fundamentally Avrong, and invariably resulting in great injury to the body politic. Jut then those- A'isionary people are sel dom or never candidates for Con gress, but when by any chance they are, defeat is always inevita ble, and they arc offered up as a sacrifice on the altar of their coun try, a lasting, and a terrible exam ple to others. This is as it should be. It in a great measure explains to foreign nations and our numerous Indian tribes, Avhy avc are such a great, untaxed, prosperous, united, happy people. My friends, your status in the scale of civiliza tion to-day Avill compare favorably with the average Missourian, or the native of the. mountainous region of North Carolina. You -have steadily progressed in the science of agriculture Until now Ave see cul tivated by you, Avith all the care and skill of the thrifty husband man, thousands of acres of land which a few short years ago AVere as Avild and untamed as your fathers. Your herds of horses and cattle ha-e multiplied until you can count them on every hill by thousands. Through my private generosity you have become pos sessed of all kinds of domestic an imals including sheep, hogs, ducks, geese, chickens, etc., etc. To behold your vegetable gardens causes one to feel justly jn-otul, and overwhelmns your Avhite neighbors Avitli jealousy and envy. Your race-horses are tho-fleetest 'in this region. Your men are the bravest, your women the purest. Pefore I came hcrc,an abortive attempt had been made to build a saAV-mill and a flouring mill on this reserve for your benefit. When I inspected this work Avhat did I behold ? 1 saAV a dam by the mill site, but, as you are aware, I did not see any mill by a damned styht ! Your mills have been erected by me, and they are as good as any in the country. ion have ueen Kept comparatively free from the con taminating influences of Western frontier civilization, and the IioavI ing Avilderness of your youth has been subdued, and made to bloom and blossom as the sunflower, so far as the alkaline nature of the soil Avould permit. So far as the application may be made to you the solution of the problem of the "Indian question' is settled". You are now fdted to become citizens of this glorious Republic, and I trust the day is not far distant Avhen you Avill be entrusted Avith the right of freemen. I allude to the franchise ! " The ballot, which. Eke snow flakes falling on the sod, Executes the freeman's will, as lightning d?cs the will .of God." At Avhich lime if you will enter tain your present sentiments of gratitude toward your early bene factor, he Avill perhaps return among you- and Jhoi for Conrress ' Thus in the future it may be in your power to repay, in a slight degree, one avIio has devoted the best years of his life in earnest, fruitful, endeavors to ameliorate your early condition of barbarism. Although my official relation with you must now cease, perhaps neA'er to be renewed, I am not go ing far away. J am too poor, even if I hrtd the inclination. I shall be your neighbor, your philosopher, your friend, ami my1 car shall ever be open to listen to the recital of your complaints, your troubles, and perhaps your Avrongs. I may be Avithout the power to do more for you than to vouchsafe my advice, consolation and sympathy, of Avhich I ever hope to have sufficient for the de mands of all. After we haATe been for months threatened with Spiritualists, and Quakers, and small pox, a com promise has evidently been effect ed, and a soldier of the army is or dered to be stationed here to per form the functions of agent. That he will be able to acquit himself creditably of tho important trust committed to his hands, much, very much depends upon your Aviiling co-operation and complete acquiesence in the p.cav state of af fairs to be inaugurated here. With this military chieftain, who will shortly assume the charge of your temporal welfare, I have no personal acquaintance. His fame as a warrior is only knoAvn to me in a general sort of a Avay, by the success of our arms in the recent struggle for the life of a nation. I allude to the "late unpleasant ness" among the Ahites on the other side of the mountains, scenes Avhich I used so often vividly to describe to you, and Avhich- you haA C c 'en depicted in lrcaifc Leslie's JJictorial. You will have ample time and opportunity to cultivate his acquaintance, and as you lis ten to the story of the dangers he has passed, you Avill, doubtless, be come greatly attached to him. We all entertain unbounded ad miration for human valor and mar tial prowess, Avhen those qualities are not directed against us person ally, and the approach of the con quering hero with the olive branch instead, of the sword, should bring the assurance that you will not be harmed or imposed upon if you con tinue to practice those virtues im planted by my constant jreceit and example for so rilanV years. From a civilian point of view, I am the last of the Indian Afods a class of " Good Samaritans" avIio have been more maligned and traduced by the common herd than any other benefactors of t he human race in any age of the Avorld. General ly, I believe, Ave have maintained a sublime imperturbility. Yvre ha"e been inA'ulnerable to the false accusations and maledictions of an envious, ignorant rabble, and have brought consolation to our Avound ed feelings oyer in the serene con sciousness that " Virtue is its own reward." My friends, our attachment and affection is mutual and is not a thing of yesterday. It has grown Arith our years and been cemented by our constant, peaceful associa tion, and Ave have the sweet reflec tion that tlic whole pOAver of the government, although it may re morselessly seA'er our official re lations, cannot estrange our mutual Ioa'c and esteem. My friends, the time, perchance, Avill come Avhen you may be hunted like the cayotc and the grizzly bear from your plea-sant fields and fruitful gardens. I do not econo mise the fact Avhen I tell you that only perfect obedience and sal mis sion to the laws made for your sup posed benefit will avert that dread ful catastrophy. The Government will not, cannot be so cruel as to drive you from your homes, and the graves of your sires, if you continue your peaceful avocations and obey the authority of those placed over you. Obey the com mands of your new Agent in all things, ami he Avill soon learn to love and respect you, but if you become troublesome and rebellious, your sojourn upon this fair domain will be brief, and, in short, yem will go out like a candle! And now mr friends, I must go, avc must part. I cannot bring my self to say that saddest of all sad Avords my emotions choke my utterance these children crying your tearful eyes resting upon me this poor old man " Camas Billy" Weeping on my shoul der unmans me I I cannot can not say-y the word my friends " Othellos occiqxdioi's gone " Farewell ! IjUFFALOS OX A J ( At LAVAY' TfiACK. A correspondent of the Chicago Tribune writes from Sheridan : Vast herds of buffalo graze along the railroad, and are frequently seen fijom the cars, and not mi fre quently so near that many .are shot Avith rifles in the passengers hands while the cars are in motion, Yes terday Ave saw upwards of thirty, by actual count, but about half a mile off. We saw several elk and antelope, and one AVolf, and dined on venison and buffalo steak. Sometimes a large herd has been surprised near the track by a train of cars. The shrieking of the wins tic and the rushing of the train has produced such a panic of fear that the herd has rushed pell-mell along in the same direction Avith the train, and at almost as great speed, thus affording a splendid opportunity for shooting from the carsv In one case the engine killed several which were on the track.- Numerous Car casses are seen of the noble animals, Avhich liaA C been slaughtered and left to perish along the line of the road, from Ellsworth to Sheridan. Sheridan lias about one thousand inhabitants, principally transient tradesmen and hotel and boarding house keepers. FOILED BY A WOMAN. A Leaf from tlic Diary of an. Old De. From the New Orleans ricayune. " Madame, it is my duty to ar rest you !" " " You dare not !" The lips Avere white with passion rather than fear, and the lady stood before me like a lioness at bay. Even then I could not help but note the splendid beauty of this grand lady. Tall and slender, eyes black and flashing almost lurid noAv, the spectacle she pre sented, standing there in . the mid dle of the apartment, was more the appearance of a qtieen than a hunt ed criminal. " I must," I replied. " I do not doubt your innocence; Looking into your fncCj it is strange" that any one could couple it wit li guilt ; but I am constrained to do my dutv, Madame, liowcver inimical it niay be to my feelings." " Will you allow me to change my dress V" he said, in a tone al most - pleasant. The hard lines around the mouth had relaxed, and the passionate glow on the face gave Avay to a pleasant smile. " Certainly, 1 will wait for you here." "I Avish also to send a messenger for a friend ; Avill you permit him to pass ? " Certainly." This Avas my first interview with Euginia Cornille. I had seen her for months, the leader of our gay est and most fashionable society. In her splendid mansion she dis pensed the most profuse and ele gant hospitality. A Spanish lady a Avidow she had represented herself and had been a resident here almost a year. No one ever suspected her of be ing aught than Avhat she seemed, until one day I Avas ordered to ar rest her as a murderess. It Was now alleged, said Mr. F., that this young beauty Avas no other than the Avoinnn aviso had poisoned her husband in Havana, and fled with all his AveaUh, An immense reward Avas offered for her apprehension, and the circum stances that had come to our knoAvledge pointed her out beyond all doubt as the person Ave avc re in search of. Yet the person avIio recognized her the CA ening before at the theatre advised us to be careful lest she should escape us. I laughed at the idea. Mr. I. and myself were surely sufficient to ar rest a lady. e Avere old enough in the Avays of cunning to defeat any such attempt. When the lad y left me I stepped to the Avindow, and said to Mr. I., avIio Avas Avait ing at the door: "Tlic lady desires to send a mes senger" for a friend ; suffer -him to pass." Almost at the same instant, the door of the apartment the lady had entered opened, and a youth ap parently a mulatto boy came out and passed hurriedly through the room into the hall, and from thence into the street. It Ava.?, no doubt, the messenger, I thought, and I picked up a book and commenced reading. Nearly an hour passed, and still the lady did not make her appearance, nor did the boy return. 1 tie friend she had sent foT must live at some distance, I thought, or the lady is unusually careful about her toilet.; and so another hour Avent by. At last I grcAV im patient, and knocked at the door. " Madame, I can wait no lon ger. There was no reply. I knocked repeatedly, and at last determined to" force an entrance. Stra nge fears barrassed me; I began to suspect, I know not Avhat. It took but a moment to drive in the door, and, once in the apartment, the mystery Av.ts revealed. The robes of the lady lay upon the floor, scattered over the room Avere puits of boys7 wearing apparel, similar to that Avorn by the mulatto boy. On the table Avas a cosmetic that Avould stain the skin to a light, delicate' brown. I was foiled, for a surety ; the lad a had escaped in the disguise of a messenger. I should haA C de- tected the ruse: I felt humiliated, ana determined to redress my er ror. I knew she would not remain iu the city an instant longer than she could get away. I hurried to her bankers, but found that she had drawn the amount due her an hour before. " Who presented the check ? 1 a"skcd of the clerk.- "A mulatto boy. It was made payable to bearer." There was yet a chance. The French steamer left Avithin an hour; it was possible she would seek that means of escape. I jumped in a cab and arrived there ten minuter, before she left the wharf just in time to assist an aged, decrepit gentleman into the cabin. There Averefew passengers; none of them answered the description of the person I sought. I stood on the wharf watching the receding ves sel until it disappeared. I Avas in the act of turning away, when a hackman approached me with the remark : "Mr. F., did you see that old man on board. He had a long Avhite beard, and hair that fell on his shoulders V" "Yes." . "Well, there's ous about him." something curb a Why ?" W Iia", sir, when he got into my carriage he Avas a mulatto boy, and Avhen lie got out lie Avas an old man !" I Avill not repeat the expression I used then it was neither refined nor polite for I kneAV the vessel would be far out to sea before she could be overtaken; I Avas foiled by a woman. Nor could I help rejoicing, now that the chase Avas over, that she had escaped. Innocent or guilty, there Avas a charm about her none could resist. The spell of her Avondrous beauty affected all avIio approached her. It lingers in my memory yet ; and I could not have the sin of her Mood upon my conscience. A Desperate Suitor. A Voting Latly Shot by Sier LoVtr From the St. Timl Fioneer, Aug. 7. We learned yesterday partial accounts of a serious affair which took place at the Nicollet House, Minneapolis on Thursday evening last, about 8 o'clock. It seems that a young lady of A ery prepos sessing appearance, named Alice Ferguson, Avho, until recently had been living in the family of IJ. J. Mendenhall, Esq., but who, for a short time, had been engaged at sewing at the Nicollet House, had unconsciously Avon the affections of a young man named Anthony Cochrane, a bricklayer in Minneap olis. The young man was a very ardent lover, but unfortunately, his love Avas not returned by the object of his affection. He pro posed and was rejected. The cold ness and indifference of the young lady droAe him almost frantic. His attentions amounted to perse cutions, and greatly annoyed the young Jady, Avho is not only very beaut ilul, but as good as she is loA'ely. She had reasoncdagain and again Avith her unreasonable admirer, until her patience Avas about exhausted. On Thursday evening he again forced himself into her room in the Nicollet house Avhere she sat seAving, and again urged his suit. Again he was re fused, when finding persuasive Avords of no effect he resorted to threats, and -drawing a reA oU er, he told her she could have her choice, cither marry him or die. Seriously alarmed, but not intimid ated, she persisted in her refusal, When he fired, the ball taking ef fect in her hand and arm, Avhich she had thrown up as a protection. This probably saved her life, as he had aimed at her head, and but for the ball striking the bone of her arm,- and being thus turned aside, she would luwe beeit killed instantH'. Immediately upon fir ing the cowardly Avretch fled, and up to our latest accounts had not been arrested, although strong hopes Avere entertained of his ar- . a t - nil v rest yesreraay. nc young lauy s arm and hand is badly shattered, and niay have to be amputated. The feeling in Minneapolis was A' cry bitter against the young man, and had he been found w hen the facts first became known, theA would have lynched him. - Mons. Lcgouve of the French Institute relates that when he once threatened a little damsel that " If she didn't behave properly he Avould tell everybody he knew' the child responded: "Well, that docseivt trouble me !" " And pray, why not?" he asked. "Because," re plied the precocious little philoso pher, " There are a great many people you don't know, and they Avill never hear anything about it!" --Ida Lewis has saved the lives of eight men, but Anna Dickinson is ft greater benefactress.- She has saved the peace of mind of a hun dred (her count) by not marrying them I A " strapping " fellow The schoolmaster. Hoav to prevent sea-sickness-stay ashore. Woman lost us one Paradise but makes us another. Tlic Pleasures of Marrictl Life. Seems to nie things have all changed somewhat, seems to me bust rae up if I don't I've been married nearly six months row, and the fact is, Susan show a heap more temper than I thought she had ; in fact, to speak the right down truth, fhe's knocked things about general ly for the last two months. She slung tho cat through the window by the tail, and would have thrown nie out by the by the heels, if I hadn't walked out in a fast rnn. She's got as cross a3 four sticks, and says she'll use a stick on my back if I don't quit smoking in tho bouse. And she threatened to throw the boot jack down my throat last night because I spit in the if5. If she'd done that, 7 suppose I'd have the colic or boot-jack cramp. Timithy P. Xigglns." said I to myself; says I, " you've gone and done it, and yoti have got to put up with the consequences ; you have come what will you can't get out of it, you can't. A girl loses her beauty mighty quick after she gets to bo Mrs. Susan Sunflower was as pretty as Venus, but just as soon as I married jer her skin turned yellow, her eyes lost their ' beauty, and ber hair got thin ! And oh what a temper she has got ! Never knowed her mad before I married her ; never knowed her to throw the stove or a chair down anybody's throat ; no, never until she was Jlrs. Niggins ! Aunt says she'll come out all right afier a while ; but I don't see why she can't be all rigbfc now, I don't. If she don't improve, the Lord help me ! " Ji.st you spit in that firo again,'-' said she to me yesterday ; " jist do it again, and I'll throw this stick of wood down your throat ! What did I marry yoii for ? To run around after you, and make) up the fire after you spit it out? You tormenting beast! Did I marry you to' slave and work for you, while you spit in the fire ? There's I henf chickens I had to feed, too ; and Den Dyke's bog weut in the garden and dug up my seed beets, and you never saw it ; there's that blamed old rooster scratched up my onion bed, and you never saw it! And you see nothing? you ought to see, and see everything you oughtn't to see ! There's Ann Buster. who was over here yesterday ; I saw you wink at her! I saw you. Tim Nigglus ! Don't say you didn't! I saw you I sar yon !" Jixchawje. . A BACHELOR'S DEFENSE. Balchelors arc styled by married men who have got their foot in it. as only half pel fected beings, cheerless vagabonds, but half a pair of scissors, and many other re diculotis titles are given to them ; while on the other hand they extoll their stale as one" so perfect that a change from earth to heaven would be of a doubtful good. If they are so happy, why don't they enjoy their happiness and hold their tongues about it ? What do half tho men get mar ried for? Simply that they may have some body to dam their stockings, and sew but tons on their shirts and trot babies ; that they may have somebody, as a married man said once, " to pull off their boots when they are a little balmy."' These fellows are always talking about the loneliness of bachelors. Loneliness in deed? "Who is petted to death by ladies . with marriageable daughters invited to tea and evening parties, and told to drop in just when it was convenient ? Tho bachelor ! Who lives in clover all his days, and when he dies has flowers strewn over his grave by the girls that Could not entrap him ? The bachelor. Who strews flowers over the married man's grave the widow ? Not muchly she pull;? down the tombstone that six week's grief had set up in her heart ; sho goes and gets married again, she does. Who goes to bed early because time hangs heavily on his shoulders ? The married man. . Who gets a scolding for picking out fa softest part of the bed, and for waking tip the baby in tho morning ? The married man. Who has wood to split, house hunting and marketing to do. the young ones to wash, and lazy serar.tsto look alter? The married man. Who is taken up for whipping his wife? Who gets divorces ? The married man. Finally, who has got the Scriptures on his side ? batchelor. St.- Paul knew what he was about when he said : '"lie that marries does well, but he that marrie3 not does better." A person of experience crystalizes the wisdom he can acquire in that way in the following sentence : "Courtship is bliss, but matrimony is blister' - i- A physician, going down Broadway with a friend of b'is, said to him, " Let 3 avoid that pretty little woman you seo there on tbs left! She knows me, and Casts on ne looks of indignation. I at tended her husband." '-Ah! I under stand you had the misfortune to dispatch him." "On the contrary," replied the doctor, li I saved him." An Irish student was once asked what was ment byposihumous works ? " They are such works.'; said he, " as a man writes alter he n dead.' I